Ebook: International Handbook of Anger: Constituent and Concomitant Biological, Psychological, and Social Processes
Author: Michael Potegal Gerhard Stemmler (auth.) Michael Potegal Gerhard Stemmler Charles Spielberger (eds.)
- Tags: Health Psychology, Sociology, Neuropsychology
- Year: 2010
- Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
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International Handbook of Anger
Constituent and Concomitant Biological, Psychological, and Social Processes
Edited by Michael Potegal, University of Minnesota Medical Center
Gerhard Stemmler, Philipps-Universitat, Marburg, Germany
Charles Spielberger, University of South Florida
From the individual rage-driven violence of domestic abuse to the destructive causes and lasting consequences of large scale ethnic and political conflict, anger and its effects are ubiquitous in human life, and are the focus of intense study across many scientific disciplines: fields as varied as affective neuroscience, health science, psychology, psychophysiology, and sociology have all contributed to recent advances in the understanding of anger. The editors of the International Handbook of Anger bring these major contributions together for a unique portrayal of the many aspects of anger—evolutionary and biological bases, behavioral processes and effects, physiological concomitants, clinical aspects, and role in the larger social picture—with coverage that is both wide-ranging and integrative. State-of-the-art findings by highly regarded experts are organized for maximum utility, with extensive cross-referencing between chapters and editors’ introductory commentary linking the book’s sections.
A sampling of the coverage in the Handbook:
- Historical views and roles of anger in Western and nonwestern cultures.
- Current genetic, neurological, neurochemical, and psychophysiological perspectives.
- Cross-cultural expressions: facial, vocal, and linguistic.
- Affective, motivational, and cognitive processes in anger.
- Gender differences in anger triggers, experience, and behavior.
- Anger in development and across the lifespan: Infancy, childhood and adulthood
- Assessing anger, hostility, and anger control.
- Clinical aspects: psychopathology, anger and chronic pain, "Type A" behavior and cardiovascular health.
- Anger in family, small-group, and large-group conflict.
The International Handbook of Anger presents a wealth of deep and detailed knowledge relevant to clinical and health psychology, social work, family studies, and anger management, among other fields. Its depth and breadth of coverage will make it a definitive volume informing research and practice in the years ahead.
International Handbook of Anger
Constituent and Concomitant Biological, Psychological, and Social Processes
Edited by Michael Potegal, University of Minnesota Medical Center
Gerhard Stemmler, Philipps-Universitat, Marburg, Germany
Charles Spielberger, University of South Florida
From the individual rage-driven violence of domestic abuse to the destructive causes and lasting consequences of large scale ethnic and political conflict, anger and its effects are ubiquitous in human life, and are the focus of intense study across many scientific disciplines: fields as varied as affective neuroscience, health science, psychology, psychophysiology, and sociology have all contributed to recent advances in the understanding of anger. The editors of the International Handbook of Anger bring these major contributions together for a unique portrayal of the many aspects of anger—evolutionary and biological bases, behavioral processes and effects, physiological concomitants, clinical aspects, and role in the larger social picture—with coverage that is both wide-ranging and integrative. State-of-the-art findings by highly regarded experts are organized for maximum utility, with extensive cross-referencing between chapters and editors’ introductory commentary linking the book’s sections.
A sampling of the coverage in the Handbook:
- Historical views and roles of anger in Western and nonwestern cultures.
- Current genetic, neurological, neurochemical, and psychophysiological perspectives.
- Cross-cultural expressions: facial, vocal, and linguistic.
- Affective, motivational, and cognitive processes in anger.
- Gender differences in anger triggers, experience, and behavior.
- Anger in development and across the lifespan: Infancy, childhood and adulthood
- Assessing anger, hostility, and anger control.
- Clinical aspects: psychopathology, anger and chronic pain, "Type A" behavior and cardiovascular health.
- Anger in family, small-group, and large-group conflict.
The International Handbook of Anger presents a wealth of deep and detailed knowledge relevant to clinical and health psychology, social work, family studies, and anger management, among other fields. Its depth and breadth of coverage will make it a definitive volume informing research and practice in the years ahead.